As the law-making body of the United Kingdom, I would like to request some information from you regarding Statutory Law.

1. Are Statutes considered contracts whereby a person must consent or contract in order for the statute to have the force of law upon them?

2. Is there one contract that is established to enforce these laws upon persons such as being a UK Citizen or is it done on an ad-hoc basis ie. a person must consent to be bound by statutes each time they are faced with one for it to become law upon them?

3. If a person is not a UK Citizen then do the statutes have the force of law upon them?

Finally and most importantly I would like to know: Do statutes made by the Commons apply to men and women on the land or just to persons and individuals?

Thanks for your help

Yours faithfully,

matthew

P.s. You may not address me as Mr. Matthew, for I am not using the name given to me on my certificate of live berth

Also, your local Library may be able to assist to locate relevant reference material about the application and interpretation of statute law.

You may, if dissatisfied with the treatment of your request, ask the House of Commons to conduct an internal review of this decision. Requests for internal review should be addressed to: Freedom of Information Officer, Department of Resources, House of Commons London SW1 OAA or [House of Commons request email] . Please ensure that you specify the nature of your complaint and any arguments or points that you wish to make.

If you remain dissatisfied, you may appeal to the Information Commissioner at Wycliffe House, Water Lane, Wilmslow, Cheshire SK9 5AF.

Could you tell me what makes my question opinion based? I simply ask who or what do the acts of parliament apply to? Do they apply to men and women? If the matter of who or what acts of parliament apply to is opinion based, then does that mean that I can choose who they apply to or can choose whether they apply to me (a man not a fictional person) or not?

How is the question of "who do statutes apply to" opinion based? Must I consent to give the acts the force of law upon me? Is that what you mean by "a matter of opinion"? I suspect you are trying to tell me more than you have written.

Could you please answer these questions and respond to these arguments?

Thank you for your time, this information is extremely valuable to me.

Dear Mr Cooper
Your questions ask a public authority to interpret general questions about statute law and to express an opinion based on that interpretation.
The information you have asked for is not held by the House of Commons and there is nothing further to add.

Bob Castle
Head of Information Rights and Information Security
House of Commons

Well, I think that was quite an abrupt statement there. To summarise, the House of Commons will not tell Matthew Cooper, for whom I am an agent, whether statutes apply to men and women. What is for sure is that statutes do apply to persons, as mentioned in the acts of parliament themselves.

Please make your own judgements and/or assumptions based on these facts.